Introduction to Veterinary Oncology Flashcards

1
Q

What are the potential differential diagnoses for a mass or swelling without any tests to rule out?

A

Inflammatory lesions (abscess, granuloma), haematoma, seroma, cyst, neoplasia etc.

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2
Q

What kind of questions should be asked in a history/determined in a physical exam?

A

Duration, how rapidly is it growing, is it well defined, is it attached to underlying tissues, has there been trauma, is it hot and painful, solid or fluid.

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3
Q

What 2 types of samples are most important in determining the diagnosis of a mass or swelling?

A

Cytology (Fine needle biopsy/aspiration) and histopathology (Biopsy)

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4
Q

What are the advantages of fine needle biopsy/aspiration?

A

Quick, cheap and easy, distinguish inflammation from neoplasia, helps determine benign or malignant.

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5
Q

What are the disadvantages of fine needle biopsy/aspiration?

A

Doesn’t always tell you benign/malignant, doesn’t tell you about tissue architecture, mitotic index, tumour grade, invasion etc.

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6
Q

What are the advantages of biopsy?

A

Gold standard for diagnosis, tells you about cell type, morphology, architecture, benign or malignant, may tell you grade etc.

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7
Q

What are the disadvantages of biopsy?

A

Need sedation/general anaesthesia, more expensive.

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8
Q

Who assigns a tumour grade? What is a low tumour grade? What is a high tumour grade?

A

The pathologist assigns grade. Low grade is relatively benign, high grade is aggressive and may behave metastatically or have the potential to.

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9
Q

If a swelling is found to be neoplastic, what are the next steps?

A

Determine tissue of origin, determine benign or malignant, establish tumour grade when possible, stage the patient, investigate tumour related diseases, discuss treatment options.

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10
Q

What does the TNM system evaluate?

A
T = Primary tumour (size, mobility, invasion)
N = Lymph node involvement (size, mobility, texture, invasion)
M = Distant Metastasis
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11
Q

What types of tumours can the TNM system not be used for? What is done instead?

A

TNM doesn’t work for systemic or multicentric disease e.g. Lymphoma. Lymphoma has it’s own WHO staging system.

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12
Q

What is a paraneoplastic disease?

A

A systemic effect of a tumour, occurring at a site distant to a tumour.

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13
Q

What are the 5 main lymph nodes that should be checked in a physical exam?

A

Submandibular, Axillary, Pre-scapular, Popliteal, Superficial Inguinal

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14
Q

What are some common paraneoplastic diseases?

A

Hypercalcaemia, hypoglycaemia, endocrinopathies, pyrexia, ulceration, vomiting.

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15
Q

What baseline tests should be done in cancer patients to investigate concurrent or tumour related complications? What are they used to investigate?

A

Haematology/CBC (anaemia, cytopenias, abnormal cells, Biochemistry (general health, organ function, paraneoplastic effects), Urinalysis (baseline screening for renal problems, dipstick, S.G., sediment)

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16
Q

What type of tumours is surgery the treatment of choice?

A

Primary carcinoma’s and sarcomas, mast cell tumours. Often used in conjunction with chemo/radiation.

17
Q

What are the main indications for the use of radiation therapy?

A

Primary treatment of nasal tumours, often adjunctive or neoadjunctive to surgery.

18
Q

What are the main indications for the use of chemotherapy?

A

Disseminated disease, highly metastatic tumours, lymphomas, leukaemias. Often adjunctive for highly metastatic e.g. OSA, HSA.